Kingmaker? It takes one to know one

Madigan’s rant against BGA another stumble for the speaker

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The rich irony of Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan denouncing somebody else for attempting to be a “kingmaker” is so obvious and laughable that I can’t help but wonder why a guy who’s been a take-no-prisoners kingmaker himself for so long in this state would ever think of saying such a thing.

You may already know the story. The Better Government Association and the Chicago Sun-Times took a look at some of Madigan’s campaign petition passers to see whether they had government jobs.

What they found wasn’t surprising at all. Seventeen of 30 people who passed Madigan’s nominating petitions worked for the government. Another 12 had at one time worked for the government.

Power tends to feed off itself. The longer you’re around, the more power you tend to have, and the more power you have, the more you can get.

And Madigan has been around Illinois and Chicago politics forever. He is at the top of the heap, as far as state government power goes.

Ideologically, Madigan has moved with the times. Politically, the man is anything but postmodern.

He’s the 13th Ward Democratic committeeman, and he runs his ward like it’s been run for a century or more.

Running an old-time organization, however, requires old-style patronage, and Madigan is a master at finding jobs for his precinct workers.

A good case in point is Patrick Ward, a Madigan precinct worker. Ward was already drawing a public pension while working at Metra, but he wanted a raise and hadn’t received one, so he asked his sponsor for help.

Madigan made a couple of calls, then backed off when the man who ran Metra objected to political interference. That guy eventually resigned with a golden parachute and a vow of silence.

But when the media got wind of it, all heck broke loose, and all fingers pointed to Madigan.

The Sun-Times and the Better Government Association’s investigation team took a look at Madigan’s most recent nominating petitions, noticed Ward was a circulator, then took a look at the other names.

The BGA sent people door to door to talk to the other circulators and see whether they were the same folks who popped up on their government employee searches. Some of those precinct workers alleged that they and their families were harassed, and Madigan got angry.

So, Madigan unleashed a diatribe against the BGA and its leader, Andy Shaw, for being on “an unrelenting journey to become a kingmaker in Illinois politics.”

He also blasted the organization for trying to undermine the Democrat Party.

Madigan is fiercely protective of the loyal members of his 13th Ward organization, who are almost like family to him.

A statement simply denouncing the BGA’s tactics would have been reasonable, although still ironic, considering how personally aggressive and “unrelenting” Madigan’s House campaigns can be.

And some of the BGA’s political motivations and top contributors are also fair game. The group preaches political cleanliness, yet it doesn’t always associate with the cleanest of the clean.

But all Madigan did with that “kingmaker” comment was turn the BGA’s Shaw into a folk hero and help Shaw raise lots more money. You’d think Madigan would comprehend the public consequences of such an over-the-top claim.

The speaker has really been off his game the past several months. He literally ran away and hid from Chicago reporter Chuck Goudie a few months ago, which resulted in a humiliating story on the Chicago media market’s most-watched TV station.

He publicly tossed his own daughter under the bus after she blamed his resistance to retirement for her decision not to run for governor.

And Madigan insulted Senate President John Cullerton last May by telling a Sun-Times reporter that Cullerton displayed a “lack of leadership” on pension reform.

Polling has shown that the public’s awareness of Madigan has grown this year. And the public definitely doesn’t like the guy.

Madigan is valued at the Statehouse for being the most grown up of the grownups. But he’s simply not acting that way of late.